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"Bustamante, Jacinta"
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Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease: recent discoveries
2020
Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease (MSMD) is caused by inborn errors of IFN-γ immunity. Affected patients are highly and selectively susceptible to weakly virulent mycobacteria, such as environmental mycobacteria and Bacillus Calmette–Guérin vaccines. Since 1996, disease-causing mutations have been reported in 15 genes, with allelic heterogeneity leading to 30 genetic disorders. Here, we briefly review the progress made in molecular, cellular, immunological, and clinical studies of MSMD since the last review published in 2018. Highlights include the discoveries of new genetic etiologies of MSMD: autosomal recessive (AR) complete deficiencies of (1) SPPL2a, (2) IL-12Rβ2, and (3) IL-23R, and (4) homozygosity for TYK2 P1104A, resulting in selective impairment of responses to IL-23. The penetrance of SPPL2a deficiency for MSMD is high, probably complete, whereas that of IL-12Rβ2 and IL-23R deficiencies, and TYK2 P1104A homozygosity, is incomplete, and probably low. SPPL2a deficiency has added weight to the notion that human cDC2 and Th1* cells are important for antimycobacterial immunity. Studies of IL-12Rβ2 and IL-23R deficiencies, and of homozygosity for P1104A TYK2, have shown that both IL-12 and IL-23 are required for optimal levels of IFN-γ. These recent findings illustrate how forward genetic studies of MSMD are continuing to shed light on the mechanisms of protective immunity to mycobacteria in humans.
Journal Article
Life-Threatening Infections Due to Live-Attenuated Vaccines: Early Manifestations of Inborn Errors of Immunity
by
Jean-Laurent Casanova
,
Zhang, Qian
,
Pöyhönen, Laura
in
Adaptive immunity
,
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccine
,
Disease
2019
Live-attenuated vaccines (LAVs) can protect humans against 12 viral and three bacterial diseases. By definition, any clinical infection caused by a LAV that is sufficiently severe to require medical intervention attests to an inherited or acquired immunodeficiency that must be diagnosed or identified. Self-healing infections can also result from milder forms of immunodeficiency. We review here the inherited forms of immunodeficiency underlying severe infections of LAVs. Inborn errors of immunity (IEIs) underlying bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG), oral poliovirus (OPV), vaccine measles virus (vMeV), and oral rotavirus vaccine (ORV) disease have been described from 1951, 1963, 1966, and 2009 onward, respectively. For each of these four LAVs, the underlying IEIs show immunological homogeneity despite genetic heterogeneity. Specifically, BCG disease is due to inborn errors of IFN-γ immunity, OPV disease to inborn errors of B cell immunity, vMeV disease to inborn errors of IFN-α/β and IFN-λ immunity, and ORV disease to adaptive immunity. Severe reactions to the other 11 LAVs have been described yet remain “idiopathic,” in the absence of known underlying inherited or acquired immunodeficiencies, and are warranted to be the focus of research efforts. The study of IEIs underlying life-threatening LAV infections is clinically important for the affected patients and their families, as well as immunologically, for the study of the molecular and cellular basis of host defense against both attenuated and parental pathogens.
Journal Article
Inherited PD-1 deficiency underlies tuberculosis and autoimmunity in a child
by
Ogishi, Masato
,
Cagdas, Deniz
,
Tangye, Stuart G.
in
692/308/2056
,
692/699/249/1313
,
692/699/255/1856
2021
The pathophysiology of adverse events following programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) blockade, including tuberculosis (TB) and autoimmunity, remains poorly characterized. We studied a patient with inherited PD-1 deficiency and TB who died of pulmonary autoimmunity. The patient’s leukocytes did not express PD-1 or respond to PD-1-mediated suppression. The patient’s lymphocytes produced only small amounts of interferon (IFN)-γ upon mycobacterial stimuli, similarly to patients with inborn errors of IFN-γ production who are vulnerable to TB. This phenotype resulted from a combined depletion of Vδ2
+
γδ T, mucosal-associated invariant T and CD56
bright
natural killer lymphocytes and dysfunction of other T lymphocyte subsets. Moreover, the patient displayed hepatosplenomegaly and an expansion of total, activated and RORγT
+
CD4
−
CD8
−
double-negative αβ T cells, similar to patients with
STAT3
gain-of-function mutations who display lymphoproliferative autoimmunity. This phenotype resulted from excessive amounts of STAT3-activating cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-23 produced by activated T lymphocytes and monocytes, and the STAT3-dependent expression of RORγT by activated T lymphocytes. Our work highlights the indispensable role of human PD-1 in governing both antimycobacterial immunity and self-tolerance, while identifying potentially actionable molecular targets for the diagnostic and therapeutic management of TB and autoimmunity in patients on PD-1 blockade.
Dysregulated immune features in a patient with a homozygous loss-of-function mutation in
PDCD1
suggest that IL-6, IL-23, STAT3 and RORγT might be potential targets for treatment of PD-1 blockade-induced autoimmunity.
Journal Article
Three Copies of Four Interferon Receptor Genes Underlie a Mild Type I Interferonopathy in Down Syndrome
by
Migaud Mélanie
,
Bustamante Jacinta
,
Rebillat, Anne Sophie
in
Autoimmune diseases
,
CD8 antigen
,
Cell differentiation
2020
Down syndrome (DS) is characterized by the occurrence of three copies of human chromosome 21 (HSA21). HSA21 contains a cluster of four interferon receptor (IFN-R) genes: IFNAR1, IFNAR2, IFNGR2, and IL10RB. DS patients often develop mucocutaneous infections and autoimmune diseases, mimicking patients with heterozygous gain-of-function (GOF) STAT1 mutations, which enhance cellular responses to three types of interferon (IFN). A gene dosage effect at these four loci may contribute to the infectious and autoimmune manifestations observed in individuals with DS. We report high levels of IFN-αR1, IFN-αR2, and IFN-γR2 expression on the surface of monocytes and EBV-transformed-B (EBV-B) cells from studying 45 DS patients. Total and phosphorylated STAT1 (STAT1 and pSTAT1) levels were constitutively high in unstimulated and IFN-α- and IFN-γ-stimulated monocytes from DS patients but lower than those in patients with GOF STAT1 mutations. Following stimulation with IFN-α or -γ, but not with IL-6 or IL-21, pSTAT1 and IFN-γ activation factor (GAF) DNA-binding activities were significantly higher in the EBV-B cells of DS patients than in controls. These responses resemble the dysregulated responses observed in patients with STAT1 GOF mutations. Concentrations of plasma type I IFNs were high in 12% of the DS patients tested (1.8% in the healthy controls). Levels of type I IFNs, IFN-Rs, and STAT1 were similar in DS patients with and without recurrent skin infections. We performed a genome-wide transcriptomic analysis based on principal component analysis and interferon modules on circulating monocytes. We found that DS monocytes had levels of both IFN-α- and IFN-γ-inducible ISGs intermediate to those of monocytes from healthy controls and from patients with GOF STAT1 mutations. Unlike patients with GOF STAT1 mutations, patients with DS had normal circulating Th17 counts and a high proportion of terminally differentiated CD8+ T cells with low levels of STAT1 expression. We conclude a mild interferonopathy in Down syndrome leads to an incomplete penetrance at both cellular and clinical level, which is not correlate with recurrent skin bacterial or fungal infections. The constitutive upregulation of type I and type II IFN-R, at least in monocytes of DS patients, may contribute to the autoimmune diseases observed in these individuals.
Journal Article
JAK Inhibitor Therapy in a Child with Inherited USP18 Deficiency
2020
A neonate with a loss-of-function mutation in
USP18
and exuberant expression of interferon-stimulated genes was experimentally treated with ruxolitinib, which suppresses interferon signaling. The initiation of treatment was followed by an improvement in the child’s clinical course.
Journal Article
The human gene damage index as a gene-level approach to prioritizing exome variants
2015
The protein-coding exome of a patient with a monogenic disease contains about 20,000 variants, only one or two of which are disease causing. We found that 58% of rare variants in the protein-coding exome of the general population are located in only 2% of the genes. Prompted by this observation, we aimed to develop a gene-level approach for predicting whether a given human protein-coding gene is likely to harbor disease-causing mutations. To this end, we derived the gene damage index (GDI): a genome-wide, gene-level metric of the mutational damage that has accumulated in the general population. We found that the GDI was correlated with selective evolutionary pressure, protein complexity, coding sequence length, and the number of paralogs. We compared GDI with the leading gene-level approaches, genic intolerance, and de novo excess, and demonstrated that GDI performed best for the detection of false positives (i.e., removing exome variants in genes irrelevant to disease), whereas genic intolerance and de novo excess performed better for the detection of true positives (i.e., assessing de novo mutations in genes likely to be disease causing). The GDI server, data, and software are freely available to noncommercial users from lab.rockefeller.edu/casanova/GDI.
Journal Article
Notch, RORC and IL-23 signals cooperate to promote multi-lineage human innate lymphoid cell differentiation
2022
Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) include cytotoxic natural killer cells and distinct groups of cytokine-producing innate helper cells which participate in immune defense and promote tissue homeostasis. Circulating human ILC precursors (ILCP) able to generate all canonical ILC subsets via multi-potent or uni-potent intermediates according to our previous work. Here we show potential cooperative roles for the Notch and IL-23 signaling pathways for human ILC differentiation from blood ILCP using single cell cloning analyses and validate these findings in patient samples with rare genetic deficiencies in
IL12RB1
and
RORC
. Mechanistically, Notch signaling promotes upregulation of the transcription factor
RORC
, enabling acquisition of Group 1 (IFN-γ) and Group 3 (IL-17A, IL-22) effector functions in multi-potent and uni-potent ILCP. Interfering with RORC or signaling through its target IL-23R compromises ILC3 effector functions but also generally suppresses ILC production from multi-potent ILCP. Our results identify a Notch->RORC- > IL-23R pathway which operates during human ILC differentiation. These observations may help guide protocols to expand functional ILC subsets in vitro with an aim towards novel ILC therapies for human disease.
Innate lymphoid cells (ILC) are effector cells that rapidly respond to immune evading stimuli, and despite their functional diversity arise from common precursors. Authors here show how the Notch signalling pathway orchestrates ILC development from circulating human ILC precursors via RORC and its target IL-23R.
Journal Article
Negative selection on human genes underlying inborn errors depends on disease outcome and both the mode and mechanism of inheritance
2021
Genetic variants underlying life-threatening diseases, being unlikely to be transmitted to the next generation, are gradually and selectively eliminated from the population through negative selection. We study the determinants of this evolutionary process in human genes underlying monogenic diseases by comparing various negative selection scores and an integrative approach, CoNeS, at 366 loci underlying inborn errors of immunity (IEI). We find that genes underlying autosomal dominant (AD) or X-linked IEI have stronger negative selection scores than those underlying autosomal recessive (AR) IEI, whose scores are not different from those of genes not known to be disease causing. Nevertheless, genes underlying AR IEI that are lethal before reproductive maturity with complete penetrance have stronger negative selection scores than other genes underlying AR IEI. We also show that genes underlying AD IEI by loss of function have stronger negative selection scores than genes underlying AD IEI by gain of function, while genes underlying AD IEI by haploinsufficiency are under stronger negative selection than other genes underlying AD IEI. These results are replicated in 1,140 genes underlying inborn errors of neurodevelopment. Finally, we propose a supervised classifier, SCoNeS, which predicts better than state-of-the-art approaches whether a gene is more likely to underlie an AD or AR disease. The clinical outcomes of monogenic inborn errors, together with their mode and mechanisms of inheritance, determine the levels of negative selection at their corresponding loci. Integrating scores of negative selection may facilitate the prioritization of candidate genes and variants in patients suspected to carry an inborn error.
Journal Article
IRF8 Mutations and Human Dendritic-Cell Immunodeficiency
by
Ceron-Gutierrez, Lourdes
,
Burk, David
,
Zumwalt, Timothy J
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Amino Acid Sequence
2011
Monocytes and dendritic cells regulate adaptive and innate immunity. This study uncovers an association between mutations in the gene encoding interferon regulatory factor 8 and deficiency of dendritic cells and monocytes in the context of disseminated bacille Calmette–Guérin disease.
The discovery of human primary immunodeficiencies that affect the development of granulocytes, B cells, and T cells has been instrumental in defining the contribution of these cell types to protective immunity.
1
,
2
Monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells — all mononuclear phagocytes — have essential functions in both innate and acquired immunity. These cells initially recognize and engulf invading microbes, produce proinflammatory cytokines (e.g., interleukin-12), and process antigens for presentation to naive T cells, which consequently secrete various lymphokines (e.g., interferon-γ).
3
,
4
On activation by cytokines secreted by T cells, mononuclear phagocytes destroy ingested microorganisms. There are no known genetic causes . . .
Journal Article
Mendelian Susceptibility to Mycobacterial Disease (MSMD): Clinical and Genetic Features of 32 Iranian Patients
by
Bustamante Jacinta
,
Moniri Afshin
,
MirHojjat, Khorasanizadeh
in
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccine
,
Congenital defects
,
Diagnosis
2020
Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial diseases (MSMD) is a rare congenital condition characterized by a selective predisposition to infections caused by weakly virulent mycobacteria and other types of intra-macrophagic pathogens. The 16 genes associated with MSMD display a considerable level of allelic heterogeneity, accounting for 31 distinct disorders with variable clinical presentations and prognosis. Most of MSMD deficiencies are isolated, referred to as selective susceptibility to mycobacterial diseases. However, other deficiencies are syndromic MSMD, defined by the combination of the mycobacterial infection with another, equally common, infectious, specific phenotypes. Herein, we described a series of 32 Iranian MSMD cases identified with seven distinct types of molecular defects, all of which are involved in the interferon gamma (IFNγ) immunity, including interleukin IL-12 receptor-β1 (IL-12Rβ1) deficiency (fifteen cases), IL-12p40 deficiency (ten cases), and IL-23R deficiency (three cases), as well as IFNγ receptor 1 (IFNγR1) deficiency, IFNγ receptor 2 (IFNγR2) deficiency, interferon-stimulated gene 15 (ISG15) deficiency, and tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) deficiency each in one case. Since the first report of two MSMD patients in our center, we identified 30 other affected patients with similar clinical manifestations. As the number of reported Iranian cases with MSMD diagnosis has increased in recent years and according to the national vaccination protocol, all Iranian newborns receive BCG vaccination at birth, early diagnosis, and therapeutic intervention which are required for a better outcome and also prevention of similar birth defects. Therefore, we investigated the clinical and molecular features of these 32 patients. The current report also defined novel classes of pathological mutations, further expanding our knowledge of the MSMD molecular basis and associated clinical manifestations.
Journal Article